Author:
Fenton M B,Portfors C V,Rautenbach I L,Waterman J M
Abstract
Hunting aerial-feeding bats, species that take airborne prey (usually flying insects), use echolocation to detect, track,and assess targets. The echolocation calls of aerial-feeding bats at sites in Canada (British Columbia and Ontario), Mexico,Brazil, and Zimbabwe were significantly dominated by frequencies between 20 and 60 kHz, although at the more tropicallocations some aerial-feeding bats used echolocation calls with most energy <20 or >60 kHz. The impact of frequency-specificattenuation, perhaps combined with frequency-specific, hearing-based defenses of some insects, suggests that by usingecholocation calls <20 kHz, bats could both extend the effective range of echolocation and make their calls less conspicuous toinsect ears. Bats using calls >60 kHz would be less conspicuous to the insects. We found two patterns of echolocation-callbehaviour. Most adjacent echolocation calls, and all that were dominated by sounds >20 kHz, showed large (80%) overlap inbandwidth. The other pattern involved much less overlap in bandwidth (030%) between adjacent calls and was evident in thecalls of the molossid Tadarida midas, which used echolocation calls dominated by sounds <20 kHz. This behaviour wouldallow the echolocating bat to extend its effective range of perception by separating in frequency the echoes returning fromadjacent calls.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
48 articles.
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